In this book, Thomas Keating invites the reader to look afresh at the Word of God and see, perhaps for the first time, the relevance of these ancient words to life today.
Keating entered the Cistercian Order in Valley Falls, Rhode Island in January, 1944. He was appointed Superior of St. Benedict's Monastery, Snowmass, Colorado in 1958, and was elected abbot of St. Joseph's Abbey, Spencer, Massachusetts in 1961. He returned to Snowmass after retiring as abbot of Spencer in 1981, where he established a program of ten-day intensive retreats in the practice of Centering Prayer, a contemporary form of the Christian contemplative tradition.
He is one of three architects of Centering Prayer, a contemporary method of contemplative prayer, that emerged from St. Joseph's Abbey in 1975. Frs. William Menninger and Basil Pennington, also Cistercian monks, were the other architects. n 1984, Fr. Thomas Keating along with Gustave Reininger and Edward Bednar, co-founded Contemplative Outreach, Ltd., an international, ecumenical spiritual network that teaches the practice of Centering Prayer and Lectio Divina, a method of prayer drawn from the Christian contemplative tradition. Contemplative Outreach provides a support system for those on the contemplative path through a wide variety of resources, workshops, and retreats. Fr. Keating currently lives at St. Benedict's Monastery in Snowmass, Colorado.
It's hard to acknowledge that I really didn't like this book since I've liked so many of Keating's other works in the past. That I didn't like it is probably more a reflection of where I am right now than where this book is. Recently I've been enjoying reading and studying about the historical Jesus and the history of the earliest Christian texts, how they were produced, how they were altered, and how they each had their own theological biases and purposes, so to in the midst of that read a book that by and large just accepts as authentic some of the passages called into question is a little off-putting. Right now, the mystical Jesus and the historical Jesus seem to be very different individuals to me.
Whether or not you agree with some of Keating's theology, these are good little devotional thoughts to help lead one into meditation. Good for a morning reading plan.